Womens Cashmere Long Cardigan with Lace Stitch in Lilac

Womens Cashmere Long Cardigan with Lace Stitch in Lilac
Womens Cashmere Long Cardigan with Lace Stitch in Lilac

Wednesday, 30 March 2011

Spring Favourites

We are so excited here at Noluur, Spring is finally here- yes even the Scottish borders have been graced with some #sunshine this week! We are loving the light nights as it allows us to get out & about, what's even better is we are getting closer to the date of when we will be receiving our shipment of Noluur Accessories- Leather Bags, Wallets and Silk Scarves, available online soon.


Our main product area is cashmere knitwear and what is so special about our cashmere knitwear is that the pieces are designed and produced in a way that allows you to wear cashmere all year round. We have intricate designs and wardrobe essentials, from greys to orange, to stripes and cables, there is something for everyone. Our cashmere is soft, luxurious, cosy and lightweight, you will be warm in the winter and #cool in the #spring. Although if today's 'spring' day is anything to go by you will want to keep warm!


Here we have selected some of our cashmere favourites- see if you agree! What's even better is we are still rolling out or 10% spring offer on all styles with free UK shipping and just so you know gift wrapping can be added at the checkout.





More #Spring Favourites online at www.noluur.com


Visit us on Facebook & Twitter 



Friday, 11 February 2011

This Week... It is nice to be nice

Hi all. Hope you have all had a good week.
We have had some Noluur milestones this week, for various reasons; our first on-line orders from Australia & Canada, an approach from a London store who want to stock our garments, plus a journalist from Spain who wants to do an article on us in a glossy fashion magazine. These are woop-de-doo’s.   
We have been perusing through comments and feedback we have loved and made us smile since our launch, the ones that stand out on the social media front are from Muireann who you can follow on Twitter @Bangsandabun - please do, her tweets will brighten up your day and you can visit her blog on www.bangsandabun.com And...
Jack Russell Clothing for the link that they have added on their website recommending us as a cashmere retailer, visit www.jackrussellclothing.com we just love their honest Britishness, you can also follow on Twitter @JackRussellClo many thanks guys- we are working on a links page ourselves which will include you, please bear with us #IT headache #Still Scowling.
On the customer side this effervescent email arrived during the week – and no, it was not written by us, but by a happy customer who’d just gotten one of our spider’s web scarves.

"... The scarf arrived today, and I am in love with it - the marketing doesn't do it justice.  It is fabulously long, wonderful to feel, and lovely to wear.  Despite its length, it is as light as a feather, drapes beautifully, and makes one feel wonderful... I cannot think that they would not be popular - I don't think the website does them justice by any means, as they are just so gorgeous.  Any woman who saw them as they really are would instantly order one- they are so sensuous and glamorous.  Even if one didn't have the self-confidence to wear them as the spidery version, they drape so beautifully as a multi-layered piece of clothing/scarf, anyone would want one, especially at the price.  I think if they were better marketed you could easily sell them at at least twice the price, especially if someone saw them - three times would be realistic…" 

You don’t get to make people feel this good doing anything else, without chemicals, fully clothed. Thanks ‘J’, you made my day. And you can relax; we’re not putting up prices either.     

Overall summary of the week...Caramba, cara mia. We love this business.

Thursday, 27 January 2011

Interpretations of the English language, trips to Uni & Noluur updates

Last week was fun. I was back at my old College, now part of Heriot Watt University, giving a talk to some of the current students. To be confronted with so much promise and risk side by side in one room is a bit daunting. I felt I should not sound like a pompous, condescending, old buffer, but duty-bound to impart at least one pearl of wisdom for these ‘bright young things’ to reflect on and carry through their working lives. It was a noble thought…
Pompous, Condescending, Old Buffer: - 8    Pearls of Wisdom: - 0.


A constant source of enjoyment during my wanderings has been the mistranslations to English on menus and notices, such as the appetising  ‘Bacterial Soup’ on sale in Beijing (which I fervently hope is a mistranslation), and ‘Hungry? Come In and Get Fed up’, down a side street in Budapest. But beyond simple mangling of the language is what I call ‘Quantum English’.


In Quantum English E=mc2. English = mad conversations, twice. The rules that normally govern the language count for nothing. Words which may make sense at first glance disintegrate into the bizarre and then on to madness. Such was the case in Inner Mongolia recently, concerning the mysterious case of the two Cypriots and the magistrate living in my hotel wardrobe. 
In the picture below, taken mainly for the sceptics among you who may doubt my grasp on reality, you will see at the top of the shoogly photograph, under ‘Bye Laws Instructions, Paragraph 4, subsections 1, 2, and 3’ that, in the event of fire, you will open the lid (of the box in the wardrobe), remove the vacuum bag and wrapping paper (around the smoke hood), before and after the two Cypriots.


At this point it did cross my mind to call reception, but it had been a struggle simply to get a clean towel earlier, so a conversation about removing illegal immigrants from a box in my wardrobe might have been beyond our collective communication skills. Why were two Cypriots in my wardrobe waiting for a fire? Was my wardrobe classed as budget accommodation for Mediterranean tourists? As the senior paying guest, did I have exclusive use of the smoke mask? I didn’t even try to figure out how we could open the bag before and after the Cypriots…
If this wasn’t alarming enough, under the section on ‘Action’ Paragraph 4, it said that, if there were no means of escape left open then, ‘The judge should immediately go to the roof or the back rooms’.

It has been a busy week, mulling over the new summer ranges and accessories. We hope you like them when they go on-line in a few weeks. Fine and breezy cottons to wear with lightweight cashmere.

Also, I have been in touch with some old friends, which is always a fine thing to do. They have been friends and business acquaintances for years. The brothers, sisters, sons, daughters, nephews, nieces, cousins, out-laws and in-laws form a substantial tribe. Family picnics look like a Dr Barnardo’s day out. They have been in the textile business for five generations, and have a great menswear clothing website at http://www.jackrussellclothing.com/ .Like their mascot, they are quite barking, in the nicest possible way.

There is some quite outstanding clothing for women coming around this spring/summer from designers such as Jason Wu, Alberta Ferreti and labels like Jaeger. Some of the beautiful flowing, practical, trousers and tops, in cotton and silk, are as good for real people, with real figures, as I have seen around for some time. I trust that the shapes will make it to the general High Street without too much alteration. 

Bye for now

Ray

Wednesday, 5 January 2011

January News

News January 2011

A ‘Happy and Prosperous New Year’ to everybody, and a particular thank you to all of our customers for the kind and positive feedback they have sent. Most of you were delighted that our quality was so exceptional for the price and the next day delivery service worked a treat. In spite of the weather all of our parcels got through. Well done UPS.

You will be glad to know that we have not passed on the VAT increase (from 17.5% to 20%), we still have 10% off, and will be giving away a free cashmere pill-comb with every order. ‘Never been a better time to buy, as there is still plenty of bite left in this winter. You'll see that we have added new scarves, hats, gloves and cosy bed socks to the ranges too.

On our travels for you and Noluur we get to meet many interesting and kind people. By and large Chinese people, like people everywhere, are friendly, honest and disarmingly hospitable. This is a good thing, especially when one gets lost, confused and generally screwed up, in foreign lands. It happens to me a lot…

I like the fast trains in China.  Compared with British trains they are faster cleaner, cheaper, more reliable, and everybody gets a seat unless you specifically opt to stand. Even the lavatories are better, which in China is saying a lot.

The snag is that English is not widely acknowledged outside of the main towns. Therefore at 5.30 in the morning, when you arrive at a railway station to find that the 5.25 has left on time exactly on time, it can be a bit of a trial trying to find out how to get onto the next train to Beijing Airport for a flight south.

The Information Desk Manager did not speak English, but did perform an energetic sort of directional dance that any bee returning to the hive would have been proud. 

The Station Guard did not speak English either, but sounded as if he could mangle German (or maybe Dutch), to a hideous degree. I could not rearrange them into a well know phrase or saying, much to his disgust.

The aged Porter got very close to being useful in English, but apparently could really only recommend some 5 star hotels, take my bags and lead me to a taxi
Meanwhile I was being encircled by an enthusiastic throng of the travelling public, many of whom were trying very hard to make me understand instructions in Mandarin. This sounded like a flock of geese in a state of alarm, to the untrained ear. Happily Mrs Ping arrived just as I was beginning to develop a headache.


Mrs Ping introduced herself and asked if we needed assistance? She spoke very simple, clear English with a hint of an Irish brogue, which was a bit surreal in the circumstances. I replied that we had, ‘…missed the train; wanted the next one; when was it; and when did it arrive in Beijing – we had a plane to catch????!’
Mrs Ping efficiently shooed away all the onlookers, who smiled at us for providing some entertainment so early in the morning. Then she arranged the station’s staffs in a row. After a few curt questions and instructions, she told me to leave my baggage with her, follow the Station Guard to the ticket office (which was outside of the station), swap our tickets for the 6.30 ‘D’ Train, come back, and board the train with her in 12 minutes time.

Mrs Ping also saw us off the train in Beijing and onto a taxi which took us to the nearest subway station for the airport. Wherever you are, a Happy New Year to you and your family, from everybody at Noluur. Oh, her Irish accent came from visits to Dublin where her daughter is studying at university, and we made the flight.


Please study the photograph of chicken noodle soup from ‘Nae Mair Chuen’ a fast food emporium in Beijing (I have changed names to protect the guilty).The more perspicacious of you may notice that there are no noodles in my chicken noodle soup. This contradicted the picture in the menu which showed a veritable skein of appetising noodles in a steaming bowl of chicken stock. 

‘Noodles from my chicken noodle soup – where are they?’ I demanded of the waitress, pointing at the picture in the menu then at the bowl. 

‘No ‘oodles’, she shot back, ‘’Oodles off’, scowling at the chicken consommé then at me, to confirm the patently obvious.

In these circumstances, my questions of, ‘Why is there a noodle famine in Beijing; am I to be offered an alternative; will I get a discount?’ got the same response.
‘No ‘oodles. Oodles off.’  

I did what I always do in these circumstances, which is break into a fit of the giggles. The waitress soon followed, as did the kitchen staffs looking on from the serving hatch and the customers around us.  Pretty soon we were all in a happy mood. I didn’t get a refund though.

In our next news, we’ll discuss why one hotel in China keeps Cypriots in the guests’ wardrobes in case of fire. Also, what we’re thinking and planning for spring and beyond.

In the meantime, keep warm.

Ray.

Sunday, 2 January 2011

Cashmere January Offers

Hope you all had a great Christmas and New Year! 


We have decided to treat you all this January; until the end of the month we will continue to roll out our special winter offer of a 10% discount on all lines and free UK delivery... PLUS we will be giving away a cashmere comb with every purchase for you to keep your cashmere item looking as lovely as the day you received it. 


Take advantage of our January offer and indulge in some lovely, luxurious and cosy cashmere knitwear... the cold snap is due back this week so it is only fair you treat yourself, we will be!

Check back regularly for updates on our plans for 2011, new Spring range using linen, bamboo and merino, far east trips that will no doubt be full of tales to tell, trade fairs, more advertising and lectures at the Heriot Watt University, phew!